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Must Watch Clip: Darrell's Only Interest of the Ball During Game

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
hi

sangita said:
pug said:
That's all very good in theory, but what happens if a team is found guilty of ball tampering and won the match? Will you just declare the other team as winners? What if, only one bowler was guilty of it and the team could have won without the said bowler's contribuAjit Agarkar was born at worli on 17 12 1977he is 27 now. He had joined tata team under 16 he tour Pakistan with India A team he bang 16 wickets in two test matches with two 5 wickets haul. He was when selected in India senior team for independence cup in he has taken 50 in 23 matches He snatched the record from none other than Australian legend Dennis Lillie in 23 September 1998. He had scored fastest 50runs by Indian in ODI agarkar had taken 200wickets in133 matches 4th'Indian to reach this mark but fastest .1000and more runs and 200wickjet 2nd Indian to reach this mark but fastest in world he scored 202 runs in 11matches he bat just 8 times in it. Salvi like agarkar both are good Player agarkar first played for tata team under 16 and mumbai his best figure is in test unbeaten 109*against at lords and 16.2-241-6against Australia in Adelaide in one day 95 run against west Indies in India and 9-2-42-6 in Melbourne against Australia he is ba from rupale and fatima is mba he is wedding anniversary is on 9 Feb. he has written many articles on cricket in Marathi and English there is a picture of ball from which he has broken the stump
Mumbai seamer developed flu yesterday.

this photo is of agarkar when he wicket of Justin langer IN MY OPINION AJIT AGARKAR IS A BETTER AND PROVEN ALLROUNDER. IN FACT THE TEAM MANAGEMENT ERRED IN ITS POLICY AND WAS JUST HELL BENT ON GIVING CHANCES ONLY TO PATHAN WHEREAS WHENEVER AGARKAR WALKED TO THE CREASE IT WAS IN A PRESSURE SITUATION. HE IS ONE OF THE CLEANEST HITTERS OF THE BALL AND HAS PROVEN HIS BATTING SKILLS EARLIER ALSO ON MANY OCCASIONS WHEN HE WAS SENT UP THE ORDER. ALSO HE HAS COME TO THE SIDE AFTER A LAYOFF AND HIS CONFIDENCE AS FAR AS HIS BATTING IS CONCERNED IS NOT THAT HIGH. SENDING HIM UP THE ORDER WILL ALSO BOOST HIS CONFIDENCE AND HE CAN BAT FREELY ONCE HE HAS PLAYED ONE OR TWO GOOD INNINGS. AS FAR AS BOWLING IS CONCERNED HE IS QUICKEST TO TAKE 50 AS WELL AS 100 AND 200 WICKETS IN ODIS FOR THE COUNTRY. FOOLS LIKE KIRTI AZAD AND MANINDER SINGH WHO ARE NOT AWARE OF HIS ACHIEVEMENTS JUST KEEP ON HARPING AGAINST HIM. IN A CHAT PROGRAMME IN ONE OF THE TV CHANNELS WHEN MANINDER AND KIRTI WERE CONFRONTED WITH A VIEWER WHO BLASTED THEM FOR OPPOSING AGARKAR IN SPITE OF HAVING SUCH A SUCCESSFUL CAREER WHAT THE TWO HAD TO SAY WAS REALLY PATHETIC. WHEN INFORMED BY THE VIEWER THAT AGARKAR HOLDS THE WORLD RECORD FOR TAKING THE QUICKEST 50 WICKETS ONLY IN HIS 23RD MATCH BEATING DENNIS LILEE'S RECORD, WHAT THESE 'GREAT EXPERTS' HAD TO SAY WAS 'HOW MANY WICKETS HE HAS TAKEN AFTER THAT? AND LIKE VERY LEARNED JUDGES ANSWERED THEMSELVES - 70 WICKETS OR SO. WELL SUCH IS THE LACK OF KNOWLEDGE ON THE PART OF THESE SO CALLED EXPERTS. AJIT AGARKAR ON THAT DAY WAS HAVING CLOSE TO 220 ODI WICKETS UNDER HIS BELT WHICH THESE PEOPLE CANNOT EVEN DREAM OF. SO 220 MINUS 50 MAKES OUT TO 170 WICKETS. SO HELL BENT WERE THEY ON ERASING HIS REPUTATION AND SHOWING HIM IN BAD LIGHT THAT THEY REDUCED 100 WICKETS FROM HIS RECORDS. AJIT AGARKAR IS A SOFT SPOKEN MAN. IF THERE WERE ANY OTHER MAN LIKE GANGULY IN HIS PLACE, HE WOULD SEEK A PUBLIC APOLOGY FROM THESE TWO PEOPLE FOR HARMING HIS REPUTATION. BUT THEIR MENTALITY OF TRYING TO GET RID OF A MUMBAIYA MAN LIKE AGARKAR, A TEAM WHICH HAS TIME AND AGAIN BEATEN THEM, IS QUITE UNDERSTANDABLE, FOR THEY CAN'T EVEN IN THEIR DREAMS RAISE THEIR VOICES AGAINST THE OTHER MUMBAIYA MAN, SACHIN.




Against Sri Lanka
Player Matches Overs Runs Wkts Best Ave S/R R/O
Ajit Agarkar 21 174.3 885 46 5-44 19.24 22.76 5.07
Harbhajan Singh 22 201.4 788 31 4-46 25.42 39.03 3.91

In Sri Lanka
Player Matches Overs Runs Wkts Best Ave S/R R/O
Ajit Agarkar 5 37 202 11 4-53 18.36 20.18 5.46
Harbhajan Singh 14 136 540 21 3-29 25.71 38.86 3.97



tions?? hi every body

It's a complex case and just as decisions to the tune of whether a batsman is out or not or whether the fielder touched the boundary rope need to be decided on field, so does this. The reason I say this is because it's not simply a case of misconduct and any decision can have a great Agarkar's contribution
I witnessed a very exciting cricket match lasts Sunday. It was between India and Australia. Our skipper won the toss and elected to bat. Cheers rent the welkin as ours opening pair issued out of the pavilion and walked into the field. The first two overs went maiden. Then the pairs on the pitch opened their shoulders the score bord registered 35 runs in 30 minus. Good going, to be sure, and a pretty brisk business. Now smart did a little bit of thinking. Brett lee came bowling change. A slow googly bowler swung into action and started causing trouble. Fast crumbled our wicket, the sticks falling they bales flying. Four of fine batmen' [Sachin, David, gangly,] returned to the pavilion inside three over we were 64-for4.but seven-wicket partnership gelds bravely on. They scored 102 runs when about200 scored was imposable. Our first inning total rested at 204. Smartly began very confidently, they piled161 for no loss in the twinkling of an eye. Our bowler [agarkar] proved costly. He gave 15 runs in his first two over. What a giver was he! But he was taken off, and brought again from other end this was the thing to-do. With his first delivery, he clean-bowled smart star batman barrio! The next pointing was out for a duck. Having been caught behind the wicket. The third man gave Agarkar the much coveted hat trick the boarded now showed175-5 our heart leaped up then there was abreact for tea /



The seventh man from smart manifested himself to be a lard hitter. He sent the first ball up for sixscored was 185 5 the scored suddenly shot for197-9 smart was getting worthy of hits name now2 there were just 10 minutes to time. The blower had bowled great one handed each catch! The catcher he was Sachin we won by 7 runs Agarkar was declarer man of match. Agarkar was with the figure of 10 -2-34-6.



Ajit Agarkar, the fast bowler from Mumbai made on of the most promising starts in one day cricket and was touted as the future Kapil Dev and Dennis Lillee. But suddenly something went wrong and now he finds himself shuttling in and out of the Indian cricket team. What went wrong?

Ajit Agarkar - The slim figure from Mumbai who hardly looked his part as a fast bowler and yet surprised many with his brisk if not fearful brand of pace bowling. He got off to the fairytale start we all know about. The most enduring memories of his period of rise 1998-2000 were that of taking 4 wickets against New Zealand in Sharjah in 1998 with his late outswingers bowled at a brisk pace which surprised the black caps that day when he rocked them. He bowled quick outswingers, which made the batsmen try to attempt extravagant cover drives only to find they had been sucked into following a late outswinger and more often than not nicking 'em to the slips. Then he would come on in his 2nd and 3rd spells and bowl reverse swingers which would bamboozle batsmen already set and swing the match in India's favour (the best examples of this were Stephen Fleming in the same match I talked about earlier and his spell against Sri Lanka at the Premadasa in 1997 when Saurav and Sachin had a 250 run partnership and India made something like 305-310 runs and ended up winning by a narrow margin). I vividly remember that he bowled particularly well against left-handers and Jayasuriya was his bunny in those days. These feats helped him get to the record and suddenly he was the future 'Dennis Lillee' of India and comparisons with the past greats like Kapil Dev and Ian Botham made the rounds in every newspaper one picked up.

Then started the horror story. Suddenly he had a spate of injuries starting with the one on his toe and after coming back his action also changed considerably (His fans would know that he had an angled run up and used to run in quicker than he does now and his ****ing of the wrists was more prominent as compared to now).

All of a sudden he could not bowl his sharp outswingers and seemed like a bowler who just landed the bowl in the pitch expecting the pitch to do the rest. He was always a seam bowler and his USP lied in his swing bowling at a fairly quick pace. There were plenty of "coaches" telling him to concentrate on line and length and forget pace. This is one of the most absurd ideas ever given to him. (If all that was required of him was to bowl line and length then we might as well have Ganguly doing it.) What was required was that he should have continued to bowl his outswingers and bowl them quick; he would have continued with his rich haul of wickets. Instead we have him running to the wicket in a lazy manner trying to just put the ball in the right place rather than making a hard effort in trying to bowl quickly and he seems lost in whatever he does.

The solution lies in telling him that for 5 matches he should be told to bowl quick and rediscover his old brand of quick swing bowling and given the freedom to try his best, just like Sachin needs to be told to bat with gay abandon as he used to in his golden days 1994-2000.
Reader's Comments
Have faithWritten by kunal.nanda on August 29, 2004 All ganguly needs to do is have faith in him and he will definitely prove his worth. The poor guy needs a more consistent time in the middle and he will definitely come back to his best. Instead of wasting time on Zaheer and Nehra who keep getting injured every second game, why not give people like agarkar more opportunity to play. - Ahjaz khan
Is Agarkar on a decline?Written by RCP1019 on August 26, 2004 Good article. I think he is one of our best fast bowlers, though costly especially for ODI format. He needs to be encouraged as he also has a better batting potential. Mind you he is only 27 years old still and has already taken 203 wickets in ODI. There is no point in expecting a Kapil Dev like performer. Perhaps that is


Back

Ajit Agarkar put up an allrounder show
Mumbai: Reigning champions Mumbai conceded first innings lead to Madhya Pradesh and then fought back on the third and penultimate day of their Ranji Trophy Elite Division group A match here on Thursday.The hosts were shot out for 233 in their first innings in reply to the visitors’ 255.Mumbai then struck back with four quick blows in MP’s second innings to leave them tottering at 13 for four. The visitors were 99 for five at stumps.Debutant seamer Santosh Shinde struck in successive balls in his very first over to leave MP gasping at two for one, then Ajit Agarkar followed suit to strike two more blows and reduced the visitors to 13 for four by the seventh over.For Madhya Pradesh, experienced campaigner Devendra Bundela remained unbeaten at close with a patient 59. Along with Nikhil Patwardhan, Bundela pulled MP out of the hole with a 73-run stand.Debutant medium pacer Sunil Dholpure picked up five wickets for 68, including the wicket of Agarkar, while paceman Sanjay Pandey claimed three for 68. Agarkar ran out of partners before becoming the last batsman to be out for a well-made 84. In Bangalore, Gujarat secured a 58-run first innings lead over Karnataka on the penultimate day of an Elite Division group A match at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Thursday.SUMMARISED SCORESIn Amritsar: Punjab 422. Assam 213 (S. Singh 59 n.o. G. Singh 6/41, N. Singh 4/39) & 146/7 (S. Saravanan 63 n.o.; G. Singh 3/25)In Bangalore: Gujarat 330 & 124/2 (Christian 57, Modi 44). Karnataka 272 (Joshi 54,
Back

Ajit Agarkar put up an allround show
Mumbai:In Ba
Seamer Ajit Agarkar was on Thursday recalled to the Indian team for the Champions Trophy one-day tournament in England after left-armer Zaheer Khan was declared unfit with a leg injury. Test wicket keeper Parthiv Patel was axed to make way for uncapped India ‘A’ gloveman Dinesh Karthik in the 14-man squad for the International Cricket Council’s 12-nation tournament to be played from September 10 to 25. Zaheer and Patel are the only omissions from the Asia Cup squad, which lost to hosts Sri Lanka in the final on Sunday. It was the 10th defeat in 13 one-day finals for Sourav Ganguly’s men in the last four years. Zaheer, dogged by hamstring injuries over the past year, was laid low again during the Asia Cup and hobbled his way in the last two matches. “Zaheer needs time to recover and the selectors wanted to rest him ahead of a busy home season that includes Tests against Australia and South Africa,” said cricket board secretary Karunakaran Nair. Agarkar fought his way back with a string of good performances for Middlesex in English county cricket, including a 5-81 against Gloucestershire at Lord’s on Wednesday. Patel, 19, was discarded after managing just 132 runs from 14 one-dayers, but remains the number one choice of the selectors for Test matches. “Parthiv is a very talented cricketer with a lot of promise and should be an automatic choice for Tests,” said chief selector Syed Kirmani, himself a former Test wicket keeper. “But he is not suited for one-dayers. We needed someone who will be effective with the bat.” Karthik, a dashing 19-year-old batsman-keeper, is currently touring Zimbabwe with the India ‘A’ side and scored 96 and 52 in the first two matches there. Left-handed Rohan Gavaskar, son of legendary Indian opener Sunil Gavaskar, will be added to the squad for two one-day tournaments prior to the Champions Trophy. India play world champions Australia and Pakistan in a one-off series in the Netherlands from August 21 to 28 and then take on England in three matches between September 1-5. India’s Champions Trophy squad: Sourav Ganguly (capt), Rahul Dravid (vice-capt), Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar, Venkatsai Laxman, Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Dinesh Karthik (wicket-keeper), Ajit Agarkar, Irfan Pathan, Laxmipathy Balaji, Ashish Nehra, Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh. Rohan Gavaskar will be added to squad for earlier matches in the Netherlands and England. AfpHome | Sport Gupta | December 26, 2004 18:28 ISTThe wicket of Bangladesh opener Nafis Iqbal in the second one-day international at Dhaka on Sunday gave Ajit Agarkar a world record.This was Agarkar's 200th wicket in the shorter version of the game. Having already aggregated 1,049 runs before this match, Agarkar joined the exclusive band of cricketers with the all-round double of 1,000 runs and 200 wickets. Agarkar was playing his 133rd match and he is now the quickest in terms of least number of matches taken to complete this all-round double. South African Shaun Pollock, who accomplished this feat in his 138th match, held the previous record.Kapil Dev, the only other Indian in this list, was the first player to do so. Pakistan's Wasim Akram remains the youngest at 26 years, 257 days, followed by Agarkar at 27 years, 22 days.The accompanying table gives details of all-rounders with 1,000 runs and 200 wickets in ODIs:Mts All-rounder For Reached on
133 Ajit Agarkar Ind V Bangladesh, Dhaka, 26-12-2004
138 Shaun Pollock SA V India, Centurion, 10-10-2001
143 Wasim Akram Pak V South Africa, East London, 15-02-1993
162 Heath Streak Zim V England, Nottingham,26-06-2003
164 Chaminda Vaas SL v New Zealand, Colombo SSC,31-07-2001
166 Kapil Dev Ind V West Indies, Sharjah, 22-10-1991
191 Shane Warne Aus V England, Melbourne, 15-12-2002
235 Sanath Jayasuriya SL v Pakistan,Sharjah,20-04-2001
244 Chris Harris NZ v West Indies, Lord's,10-07-2004
Agarkar also became the quickest among Indians to take 200 wickets. Agarkar accomplished the feat in only 133 matches -- 14 lesser than Anil Kumble and Javagal Srinath, who previously held the record for India. In all ODIs, Agarkar is joint fifth fastest with Australia's Glenn McGrath and after Pakistan's Saqlain Mushtaq (104), South Africa's Allan Donald (117), Pakistan's Waqar Younis (118) and Australia's Shane Warne (125).Indian bowlers with 200 ODI wickets:Bowler Mts Balls Runs Wkts Ave Best SR Rpo 5W Mts for 200 wkts
Anil Kumble 259 13817 9854 321 30.70 6/12 43.04 4.28 2 147
J Srinath 229 11935 8847 315 28.09 5/23 37.89 4.45 3 147
Kapil Dev 225 11202 6945 253 27.45 5/43 44.28 3.72 1 166
Ajit Agarkar 133 6607 5621 201 27.96 6/42 32.87 3.11 1 133
India's tour of Bangladesh: The Complete Coverage Article Tools






.
During the break in hostilities between India and Australia, Ajit Agarkar went back to his roots and turned out for Tata Sports Club in the Times Shield cricket tournament. The Mumbai medium-pacer believes in being prepared when opportunity arises. Irfan Pathan's side strain has presented him the ideal chance of returning to action in the ongoing series.Since the ICC Champions Trophy in England, India's paceman are in forced rotation because of injuries, as a result of which none of them has been able to cement their places in the side. Agarkar is one of them, still looking forward to play his first Test since the tour of Pakistan in April.Senior Correspondent Ashish Magotra caught up with the wiry Mumbai medium pacer to find out about his inconsistencies, strengths and weaknesses.What does the word 'competition' mean to you?That's what probably pushes you to perform at the highest level possible. It's all about winning at the end of the day. Of course, there are people who say that winning and losing doesn't matter, but I think you play to win; that's what your aim should be.Personally, the satisfaction is more when you perform against a good team or player. Sometimes there is a bit of gamesmanship that goes on, but you have to rise above it all. Whether you are playing for your club or country, you want to be competitive and you want to be known as a competitor.People have described you as an enigma; a player who on one day can destroy the opposition, but inexplicably looks out of rhythm the next day. What is your answer to such criticism?It is their opinion, really. There are going to be days when it just doesn't work. And there will be days when everything seems to be perfect. Even the great players go through these phases. As long as I can come up with the goods, more often then not, I am happy.Obviously, there will be people who say that I lack that consistency. On the other hand, there will be people who say that I am consistent enough. Every time I am out on the field I give my 100 per cent, whether it is for my club, Tata's, or the country. You start playing cricket because you love it and not because of any other reason; that's always been the case so far.Your spell of 6 for 41 in Australia helped India win the Test in Adelaide. Would you consider that your best spell ever?Yes, it has to be. That's the only five-for I have in Test cricket… and to win the match. That probably keeps it in the mind. If we had lost the match then probably it would not have been my best spell. I got a few wickets in Melbourne and that was one of the days when everything seemed to be going right for me. You don't do anything different, but it is just that sometimes things work for you. The way nicks were going to hand; we had some plans for some batters and they worked.You were fastest to fifty wickets in One-Day Internationals, but after that things have not really gone your way. Are you disappointed with the progress you have made?I wouldn't say disappointed. Everyone wants to perform at a higher level than they currently are. But it doesn't always happen that way. If you are satisfied then you are in trouble. Fast bowling in India is not easy. There were a few injuries along the way; there were a few losses of form and some other bowler came and capitalized. When I came into the team, I did the same. I think it's a circle and I am fairly happy with the way I have gone about things. I probably would have liked to pick up some more Test wickets for sure. But that's the way it goes. Unfortunately, someone else was picked at that time or I wasn't in good form, or in the initial years we were playing three spinners and [Javagal] Srinath was the lone seamer in the side. Now, probably, that doesn't give you the best picture, but I'll be 27 in a month's time and, hopefully, I have a fairly long way to go.What do you feels are your biggest strengths and weaknesses?For sure, my strength is that I always try hard and never give up till the last ball is bowled. Weaknesses, my wife Probably, people find a lot of them; so, maybe, you should ask them. Personally, though, I would like to be more consistent; try to minimize the bad days and get up every morning and put the ball in the right areas and feel the same as you did on a good day.Injuries and you have been synonymous. Stress factures, muscles pulls, hamstring strains, you name it and you seem to have suffered them at some time or the other…Who hasn't? Unfortunately, I am synonymous with
 

Pedro Delgado

International Debutant
sangita said:
pug said:
That's all very good in theory, but what happens if a team is found guilty of ball tampering and won the match? Will you just declare the other team as winners? What if, only one bowler was guilty of it and the team could have won without the said bowler's contributions?? hi every body

It's a complex case and just as decisions to the tune of whether a batsman is out or not or whether the fielder touched the boundary rope need to be decided on field, so does this. The reason I say this is because it's not simply a case of misconduct and any decision can have a great Agarkar's contribution
I witnessed a very exciting cricket match lasts Sunday. It was between India and Australia. Our skipper won the toss and elected to bat. Cheers rent the welkin as ours opening pair issued out of the pavilion and walked into the field. The first two overs went maiden. Then the pairs on the pitch opened their shoulders the score bord registered 35 runs in 30 minus. Good going, to be sure, and a pretty brisk business. Now smart did a little bit of thinking. Brett lee came bowling change. A slow googly bowler swung into action and started causing trouble. Fast crumbled our wicket, the sticks falling they bales flying. Four of fine batmen' [Sachin, David, gangly,] returned to the pavilion inside three over we were 64-for4.but seven-wicket partnership gelds bravely on. They scored 102 runs when about200 scored was imposable. Our first inning total rested at 204. Smartly began very confidently, they piled161 for no loss in the twinkling of an eye. Our bowler [agarkar] proved costly. He gave 15 runs in his first two over. What a giver was he! But he was taken off, and brought again from other end this was the thing to-do. With his first delivery, he clean-bowled smart star batman barrio! The next pointing was out for a duck. Having been caught behind the wicket. The third man gave Agarkar the much coveted hat trick the boarded now showed175-5 our heart leaped up then there was abreact for tea /



The seventh man from smart manifested himself to be a lard hitter. He sent the first ball up for sixscored was 185 5 the scored suddenly shot for197-9 smart was getting worthy of hits name now2 there were just 10 minutes to time. The blower had bowled great one handed each catch! The catcher he was Sachin we won by 7 runs Agarkar was declarer man of match. Agarkar was with the figure of 10 -2-34-6.



Ajit Agarkar, the fast bowler from Mumbai made on of the most promising starts in one day cricket and was touted as the future Kapil Dev and Dennis Lillee. But suddenly something went wrong and now he finds himself shuttling in and out of the Indian cricket team. What went wrong?

Ajit Agarkar - The slim figure from Mumbai who hardly looked his part as a fast bowler and yet surprised many with his brisk if not fearful brand of pace bowling. He got off to the fairytale start we all know about. The most enduring memories of his period of rise 1998-2000 were that of taking 4 wickets against New Zealand in Sharjah in 1998 with his late outswingers bowled at a brisk pace which surprised the black caps that day when he rocked them. He bowled quick outswingers, which made the batsmen try to attempt extravagant cover drives only to find they had been sucked into following a late outswinger and more often than not nicking 'em to the slips. Then he would come on in his 2nd and 3rd spells and bowl reverse swingers which would bamboozle batsmen already set and swing the match in India's favour (the best examples of this were Stephen Fleming in the same match I talked about earlier and his spell against Sri Lanka at the Premadasa in 1997 when Saurav and Sachin had a 250 run partnership and India made something like 305-310 runs and ended up winning by a narrow margin). I vividly remember that he bowled particularly well against left-handers and Jayasuriya was his bunny in those days. These feats helped him get to the record and suddenly he was the future 'Dennis Lillee' of India and comparisons with the past greats like Kapil Dev and Ian Botham made the rounds in every newspaper one picked up.

Then started the horror story. Suddenly he had a spate of injuries starting with the one on his toe and after coming back his action also changed considerably (His fans would know that he had an angled run up and used to run in quicker than he does now and his ****ing of the wrists was more prominent as compared to now).

All of a sudden he could not bowl his sharp outswingers and seemed like a bowler who just landed the bowl in the pitch expecting the pitch to do the rest. He was always a seam bowler and his USP lied in his swing bowling at a fairly quick pace. There were plenty of "coaches" telling him to concentrate on line and length and forget pace. This is one of the most absurd ideas ever given to him. (If all that was required of him was to bowl line and length then we might as well have Ganguly doing it.) What was required was that he should have continued to bowl his outswingers and bowl them quick; he would have continued with his rich haul of wickets. Instead we have him running to the wicket in a lazy manner trying to just put the ball in the right place rather than making a hard effort in trying to bowl quickly and he seems lost in whatever he does.

The solution lies in telling him that for 5 matches he should be told to bowl quick and rediscover his old brand of quick swing bowling and given the freedom to try his best, just like Sachin needs to be told to bat with gay abandon as he used to in his golden days 1994-2000.
Reader's Comments
Have faithWritten by kunal.nanda on August 29, 2004 All ganguly needs to do is have faith in him and he will definitely prove his worth. The poor guy needs a more consistent time in the middle and he will definitely come back to his best. Instead of wasting time on Zaheer and Nehra who keep getting injured every second game, why not give people like agarkar more opportunity to play. - Ahjaz khan
Is Agarkar on a decline?Written by RCP1019 on August 26, 2004 Good article. I think he is one of our best fast bowlers, though costly especially for ODI format. He needs to be encouraged as he also has a better batting potential. Mind you he is only 27 years old still and has already taken 203 wickets in ODI. There is no point in expecting a Kapil Dev like performer. Perhaps that is


Back

Ajit Agarkar put up an allrounder show
Mumbai: Reigning champions Mumbai conceded first innings lead to Madhya Pradesh and then fought back on the third and penultimate day of their Ranji Trophy Elite Division group A match here on Thursday.The hosts were shot out for 233 in their first innings in reply to the visitors’ 255.Mumbai then struck back with four quick blows in MP’s second innings to leave them tottering at 13 for four. The visitors were 99 for five at stumps.Debutant seamer Santosh Shinde struck in successive balls in his very first over to leave MP gasping at two for one, then Ajit Agarkar followed suit to strike two more blows and reduced the visitors to 13 for four by the seventh over.For Madhya Pradesh, experienced campaigner Devendra Bundela remained unbeaten at close with a patient 59. Along with Nikhil Patwardhan, Bundela pulled MP out of the hole with a 73-run stand.Debutant medium pacer Sunil Dholpure picked up five wickets for 68, including the wicket of Agarkar, while paceman Sanjay Pandey claimed three for 68. Agarkar ran out of partners before becoming the last batsman to be out for a well-made 84. In Bangalore, Gujarat secured a 58-run first innings lead over Karnataka on the penultimate day of an Elite Division group A match at the M Chinnaswamy Stadium on Thursday.SUMMARISED SCORESIn Amritsar: Punjab 422. Assam 213 (S. Singh 59 n.o. G. Singh 6/41, N. Singh 4/39) & 146/7 (S. Saravanan 63 n.o.; G. Singh 3/25)In Bangalore: Gujarat 330 & 124/2 (Christian 57, Modi 44). Karnataka 272 (Joshi 54,
Back

Ajit Agarkar put up an allround show
Mumbai:In Ba
Seamer Ajit Agarkar was on Thursday recalled to the Indian team for the Champions Trophy one-day tournament in England after left-armer Zaheer Khan was declared unfit with a leg injury. Test wicket keeper Parthiv Patel was axed to make way for uncapped India ‘A’ gloveman Dinesh Karthik in the 14-man squad for the International Cricket Council’s 12-nation tournament to be played from September 10 to 25. Zaheer and Patel are the only omissions from the Asia Cup squad, which lost to hosts Sri Lanka in the final on Sunday. It was the 10th defeat in 13 one-day finals for Sourav Ganguly’s men in the last four years. Zaheer, dogged by hamstring injuries over the past year, was laid low again during the Asia Cup and hobbled his way in the last two matches. “Zaheer needs time to recover and the selectors wanted to rest him ahead of a busy home season that includes Tests against Australia and South Africa,” said cricket board secretary Karunakaran Nair. Agarkar fought his way back with a string of good performances for Middlesex in English county cricket, including a 5-81 against Gloucestershire at Lord’s on Wednesday. Patel, 19, was discarded after managing just 132 runs from 14 one-dayers, but remains the number one choice of the selectors for Test matches. “Parthiv is a very talented cricketer with a lot of promise and should be an automatic choice for Tests,” said chief selector Syed Kirmani, himself a former Test wicket keeper. “But he is not suited for one-dayers. We needed someone who will be effective with the bat.” Karthik, a dashing 19-year-old batsman-keeper, is currently touring Zimbabwe with the India ‘A’ side and scored 96 and 52 in the first two matches there. Left-handed Rohan Gavaskar, son of legendary Indian opener Sunil Gavaskar, will be added to the squad for two one-day tournaments prior to the Champions Trophy. India play world champions Australia and Pakistan in a one-off series in the Netherlands from August 21 to 28 and then take on England in three matches between September 1-5. India’s Champions Trophy squad: Sourav Ganguly (capt), Rahul Dravid (vice-capt), Virender Sehwag, Sachin Tendulkar, Venkatsai Laxman, Yuvraj Singh, Mohammad Kaif, Dinesh Karthik (wicket-keeper), Ajit Agarkar, Irfan Pathan, Laxmipathy Balaji, Ashish Nehra, Anil Kumble, Harbhajan Singh. Rohan Gavaskar will be added to squad for earlier matches in the Netherlands and England. AfpHome | Sport Gupta | December 26, 2004 18:28 ISTThe wicket of Bangladesh opener Nafis Iqbal in the second one-day international at Dhaka on Sunday gave Ajit Agarkar a world record.This was Agarkar's 200th wicket in the shorter version of the game. Having already aggregated 1,049 runs before this match, Agarkar joined the exclusive band of cricketers with the all-round double of 1,000 runs and 200 wickets. Agarkar was playing his 133rd match and he is now the quickest in terms of least number of matches taken to complete this all-round double. South African Shaun Pollock, who accomplished this feat in his 138th match, held the previous record.Kapil Dev, the only other Indian in this list, was the first player to do so. Pakistan's Wasim Akram remains the youngest at 26 years, 257 days, followed by Agarkar at 27 years, 22 days.The accompanying table gives details of all-rounders with 1,000 runs and 200 wickets in ODIs:Mts All-rounder For Reached on
133 Ajit Agarkar Ind V Bangladesh, Dhaka, 26-12-2004
138 Shaun Pollock SA V India, Centurion, 10-10-2001
143 Wasim Akram Pak V South Africa, East London, 15-02-1993
162 Heath Streak Zim V England, Nottingham,26-06-2003
164 Chaminda Vaas SL v New Zealand, Colombo SSC,31-07-2001
166 Kapil Dev Ind V West Indies, Sharjah, 22-10-1991
191 Shane Warne Aus V England, Melbourne, 15-12-2002
235 Sanath Jayasuriya SL v Pakistan,Sharjah,20-04-2001
244 Chris Harris NZ v West Indies, Lord's,10-07-2004
Agarkar also became the quickest among Indians to take 200 wickets. Agarkar accomplished the feat in only 133 matches -- 14 lesser than Anil Kumble and Javagal Srinath, who previously held the record for India. In all ODIs, Agarkar is joint fifth fastest with Australia's Glenn McGrath and after Pakistan's Saqlain Mushtaq (104), South Africa's Allan Donald (117), Pakistan's Waqar Younis (118) and Australia's Shane Warne (125).Indian bowlers with 200 ODI wickets:Bowler Mts Balls Runs Wkts Ave Best SR Rpo 5W Mts for 200 wkts
Anil Kumble 259 13817 9854 321 30.70 6/12 43.04 4.28 2 147
J Srinath 229 11935 8847 315 28.09 5/23 37.89 4.45 3 147
Kapil Dev 225 11202 6945 253 27.45 5/43 44.28 3.72 1 166
Ajit Agarkar 133 6607 5621 201 27.96 6/42 32.87 3.11 1 133
India's tour of Bangladesh: The Complete Coverage Article Tools






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During the break in hostilities between India and Australia, Ajit Agarkar went back to his roots and turned out for Tata Sports Club in the Times Shield cricket tournament. The Mumbai medium-pacer believes in being prepared when opportunity arises. Irfan Pathan's side strain has presented him the ideal chance of returning to action in the ongoing series.Since the ICC Champions Trophy in England, India's paceman are in forced rotation because of injuries, as a result of which none of them has been able to cement their places in the side. Agarkar is one of them, still looking forward to play his first Test since the tour of Pakistan in April.Senior Correspondent Ashish Magotra caught up with the wiry Mumbai medium pacer to find out about his inconsistencies, strengths and weaknesses.What does the word 'competition' mean to you?That's what probably pushes you to perform at the highest level possible. It's all about winning at the end of the day. Of course, there are people who say that winning and losing doesn't matter, but I think you play to win; that's what your aim should be.Personally, the satisfaction is more when you perform against a good team or player. Sometimes there is a bit of gamesmanship that goes on, but you have to rise above it all. Whether you are playing for your club or country, you want to be competitive and you want to be known as a competitor.People have described you as an enigma; a player who on one day can destroy the opposition, but inexplicably looks out of rhythm the next day. What is your answer to such criticism?It is their opinion, really. There are going to be days when it just doesn't work. And there will be days when everything seems to be perfect. Even the great players go through these phases. As long as I can come up with the goods, more often then not, I am happy.Obviously, there will be people who say that I lack that consistency. On the other hand, there will be people who say that I am consistent enough. Every time I am out on the field I give my 100 per cent, whether it is for my club, Tata's, or the country. You start playing cricket because you love it and not because of any other reason; that's always been the case so far.Your spell of 6 for 41 in Australia helped India win the Test in Adelaide. Would you consider that your best spell ever?Yes, it has to be. That's the only five-for I have in Test cricket… and to win the match. That probably keeps it in the mind. If we had lost the match then probably it would not have been my best spell. I got a few wickets in Melbourne and that was one of the days when everything seemed to be going right for me. You don't do anything different, but it is just that sometimes things work for you. The way nicks were going to hand; we had some plans for some batters and they worked.You were fastest to fifty wickets in One-Day Internationals, but after that things have not really gone your way. Are you disappointed with the progress you have made?I wouldn't say disappointed. Everyone wants to perform at a higher level than they currently are. But it doesn't always happen that way. If you are satisfied then you are in trouble. Fast bowling in India is not easy. There were a few injuries along the way; there were a few losses of form and some other bowler came and capitalized. When I came into the team, I did the same. I think it's a circle and I am fairly happy with the way I have gone about things. I probably would have liked to pick up some more Test wickets for sure. But that's the way it goes. Unfortunately, someone else was picked at that time or I wasn't in good form, or in the initial years we were playing three spinners and [Javagal] Srinath was the lone seamer in the side. Now, probably, that doesn't give you the best picture, but I'll be 27 in a month's time and, hopefully, I have a fairly long way to go.What do you feels are your biggest strengths and weaknesses?For sure, my strength is that I always try hard and never give up till the last ball is bowled. Weaknesses, my wife Probably, people find a lot of them; so, maybe, you should ask them. Personally, though, I would like to be more consistent; try to minimize the bad days and get up every morning and put the ball in the right areas and feel the same as you did on a good day.Injuries and you have been synonymous. Stress factures, muscles pulls, hamstring strains, you name it and you seem to have suffered them at some time or the other…Who hasn't? Unfortunately, I am synonymous with

You had me at hello.
 

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
sangita said:
sangita said:
hi pug do you like ajit agarkar ANY ONE OF YOU LIKE AJIT AGARKAR HE IS MY HERO I LIKE VERY VERY VERY VERY VER YVERY VERY VERY VERYVERY MUCH
LM1MHQY86FYXBHYXEven though his recent performances with the ball have been acknowledged, Ajit Agarkar, by and large, has been accused of not exploiting his opportunities well enough. From another perspective, it can also be said that he has been India’s convenient fall guy
MUMBAI: Ajit Agarkar can’t be taken for granted. Not after playing for eight years.Since he made his debut for India in April 1998, 26 fast-medium pace bowlers have played for India.
Only six of them are good enough to play for India now, of which four have only a combined experience of 33 one-day games. Agarkar has missed 47 one-day internationals due to injury or after not being picked to play. But a few comebacks later, Agarkar has managed to play 159 times for India in all.
He is the most experience medium-pacer among the current lot.That demands some respect.
Way back in the late ’90s, when Agarkar first established himself in the Indian squad, Rahul Dravid was not considered good enough for ODIs. From the team that Agarkar first played in, only Sachin Tendulkar and he continue to play, now under Dravid. That must earn him some more respect.
Yet he is called an under-achiever, many would say rightly so, pointing to the fact that he has played only 26 Test matches. The critics could also point to his ODI economy rate of 5.10, the worst for a bowler who has bagged over 150 wickets. Erratic, shiftless and other less flattering adjectives are associated with him.
Agarkar, though, couldn’t care less. “I don’t care what people call me. There are too many likes and dislikes. You can’t shut everyone’s mouth,” he says. “Names and tags just stick.”
Agarkar had just finished an hour of training at the Cricket Club of India (CCI) early on Wednesday. Back from a short holiday in Goa with his wife and six-month-old son Raj, he is working up a sweat with the West Indies tour less than a fortnight away.
“Not everyone can be the best cricketer in the world,” he continues. “I have always given my 100 per cent whether it is for Tata Steel, CCI, Mumbai or India.”
But that cannot change mindsets. “Look at Anil Kumble who has 500 Test wickets,” Agarkar says. “Personally, I think he is India’s greatest match-winner. But he never got the credit he deserved,” he says.
Even legends get stereotyped.
Agarkar was hailed as the next great all-rounder after Kapil Dev. A one-day batting average of 16.44 without a hundred must rankle. “I never said I am an all-rounder. I never came into the team as an all-rounder. My primary job is to take wickets,” he says in his defence. “It’s unfair to consider me an all-rounder, make me bat at No.9 and then crucify me for not scoring as many runs.”
Agarkar has hit the quickest 50 in ODIs by an Indian and has a Test hundred at Lord’s. “I have made decent contributions with the bat. Maybe I have not scored as many runs as I would like,” he admits. “But I have never been given enough of an opportunity to bat at No.3. The first time I played at No.3, I hit 95 and then I scored six.”
“At least let me bat at No.7 if not No.6. I have batted at No. 8 and No.9 most of the time and got only three to four overs. But I have got 1000-plus runs from so low down the order,” he says. “I have got runs when I have had the luxury of a few overs.” He points to his 53 in 62 balls at No.8 in the VB Series final in 2004 against Australia at the MCG.
So has he got enough opportunities in Tests? “I scored an unbeaten 109 at Lord’s in 2002 and I did pretty well. But I was not picked for next home series against West Indies,” he says.
“It’s disappointing when you are chucked out of the Test squad. I played the three Tests against Sri Lanka and the Lahore game against Pakistan where Rahul Dravid and Virender Sehwag put on 410 for the first wicket. I got two wickets on a flat track in that game, but did not play in Karachi that was the best bowling wicket during the tour.”
Agarkar never makes news when he is not picked. “No one bothers when I am dropped,” he says. “Statistics can be used to one’s advantage or disadvantage. But I have no complaints.”
Agarkar has 58 wickets from 26 Tests at an unenviable average of 47.32. “Ideally, I do not like such a big gap between my one-day and Tests figures,” he admits.
With youngsters coming into the team, Agarkar at 28 knows he must find his rhythm more often than before. He bowled first change in Abu Dhabi as Irfan Pathan and S Sreesanth took the new ball. “The roles have changed a little bit. But after 150-odd ODIs, I must be able to bowl effectively during anytime of the innings,” he says.
“I am definitely feeling good about my bowling. The ball is coming out well and I am able to get into a great rhythm straight away. It’s upto the youngsters to prove that they are good enough. I know if I don’t perform my place is up for grabs.”
Many have fallen by the way-side trying to steal the spot from India’s ‘Comeback kid’. That, by the way, is another tag Agarkar does not subscribe to.Amstelveen: India's injury woes mounted as Ajit Agarkar, who played against Pakistan in the tri-series opener, was on Sunday ruled out of the crucial second league tie against world champions Australia on Monday because of a side strain."Agarkar is unlikely to play in tomorrow's (Monday) match. He has a side strain", team manager Gautam Dasgupta said in Amstelveen on Sunday.The wiry pace bowler had been omitted from the squad that took part in the Asia Cup tournament in Colombo last month and played his first ODI on Saturday since the VB Series in Australia in January-February.However, there was some encouraging news about off-spinner Harbhajan Singh. "He has recovered greatly and may find a place in the playing eleven," the manager added.The team had already been hit by the "tennis elbow" which ruled Sachin Tendulkar out of the entire tournament and by viral fever that had laid low Harbhajan and Ashish Nehra soon after the team's arrival in Holland.Mohammad Kaif has also suffered a shoulder injury but should be able to play on Monday. "Kaif has a shoulder strain, but he should be alright to play tomorrow (Monday)," Dasgupta said.Nehra too is better on Sunday as compared to his condition two days ago, but he's still not match-fit, according to the team manager.

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Ajit Agarkar


Profile
Full Name: Ajit Balachandra Agarkar
Date of Birth: Dec 4 , 1977
Place of Birth: Mumbai
Country : India
Batting Style: Right Hand Batsman
Bowling Style: Right arm fast medium bowler
ODI Debut : India vs. Australia, at Kochi, on 1/4/98
Test Debut : India vs. Zimbabwe at Harare, 1998/99

This right arm medium pacer from Mumbai is a thin looking fellow but is no push over which he proved by racing to 50 wickets in one day internationals faster than anyone else - breaking the record held by none other than Dennis Lillee. He came up through the India A ranks and in late 90s he was thought to be the most talented young all rounders in the Indian team. However, the thought shattered when he performed poorly in subsequent Tests and ODI's. After a nightmarish tour of Australia, his place in the national side came under severe scrutiny but the determination and talent of this young man helped him in overcoming all the problems. During the year 2000 he proved that he was far from washed up - particularly in the one day game. Towards the end of an eventful year for him, Agarkar hit the fastest half century - off only 21 balls - to surpass a famous record held by Kapil Dev, who reached the mark off in 22 balls in 1983. Now it is on the Indian selectors to take care of him for he seems capable enough to take charge of India's bowling in the coming years.
Homepage
-Profile: A young lad, who graduated from the India 'A' team, he impressed one and all with his aggresive bowling. Holds the record for the fastest 50 wickets in One Day Internationals.Was considered a very good bet for the World Cup.Unfortunately, for himself and the Indian team that was not to be. He cracked on the big stage and ultimately lost his place to Mohanty.A decent batsman and a committed player on the field he is sure to serve India for long.He also hold s the dubious record for the most consecutive ducks (five ducks is five innings) .He has been a very useful batsmen down the order of late and also compiled the fastest fifty by an Indian. His fifty coming of a mere 21 balls.He has also regained some of his excellent bowling form of late.
Give Ajit Bhalchandra Agarkar a ball in his hand, he gathers enough wickets to put up stakes around his Shivaji Park property in Mumbai. But give him a willow; he gathers eggs like a chicken farmer. Perhaps, ducks are dearer to him than runs.

As a bowler, the sinewy quick has emerged from the brigade of also rans to earn his stripes as a match-winner, his two six-wicket hauls at Adelaide (second Test) and Melbourne (first one-dayer) on this tour manifesting that the strike bowler in him has come of age.

But as a batsman, he has been an absolute disaster. In fact, he has taken after Bob Holland (five successive ducks) and Courtney Walsh (record number of blobs) in his single-minded pursuit to decorate his career with an array of anemic ducklings, which have been endemic when facing Australia. He has harnessed a record eight against the Roos, a rare hat trick to go with it at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

If he has been consistent, it has been in the fielding department, his agility and sharpness marking him as the best in the side. He is about only two Indian fieldsmen (Sachin Tendulkar being the other) who can rifle in returns with both hands. He is a threat to those who dare to chance his arms.

Despite his bowling conquests in this series — 16 wickets in four Tests and six in the tri-series — the 26-year-old has been a huge disappointment to himself, team and country. When he was capped in 1998, he was regarded as a budding all-rounder. A couple of years later, he was regarded as a batsman who could bowl. As one disappointing performance led to another, he regarded himself as a bowler who could bat.

“I consider myself a bowler who can bat. But I am trying hard to fit into the role of an all-rounder,” Agarkar had said on the 2001 tour of Zimbabwe. Today, we can regard him as a bowler and a bunny with the bat. He has hopelessly failed, when a committed player like Jason Gillespie, more a genuine bowler than a batsman, has put his hand up and scored runs at critical situations.

If the Indian tail has been long and prolonged, Agarkar is undoubtedly the chief architect of this brittle dynasty. There have been times when Tendulkar, who believed that Agarkar had the potential to develop into a genuine all-rounder, has rung his head in utter despair. Agoooooooorkar (the o’s in his name depict the eight zeroes he has conjured against Australia) pretty well knows the embarrassment and pressure that his mentor has been through. Yet, the batsman in him, which was apparent when he donned the Indian under-19 colours -- hasn’t shown its true hue in international cricket. It has merely remained in the womb of Agarkar’s self-conscious and our fertile imagination.

It is not that he can’t be counted as a batter. He is one of six Indians to have scored a Test hundred at the revered Lord’s. He has a 95 against West Indies (Jamshedpur, November 2002) and a rapid-fire half century (67 not out against Zimbabwe at Rajkot) in one-dayers as well. But overall in 122 one-dayers, he has ‘amassed’ 881 runs, averaging a *****rdly 16.94, which would do a tailender proud.

India’s fervent prayer for an all-rounder (nobody is even a zillionth mile close to Kapil Dev) would have been answered had Agarkar been consistently chipping in with 20-30 runs to go along with his improved skill as a fast bowler. But somehow, and balefully, he has failed to deliver, continuing to be an enigma to his captain and ardent cricket followers. Perhaps, the team management would do well to ***** his pride by sending him to bat at number eleven, a position at which Walsh and Holland batted at in their heydays.

It will be an insult, which should, if he reacts as we homosapiens normally do, stirs him to play to his potential.

It is Aussie folklore that Ian Chappell had fired up Dennis Lillee in the 1981-82 Ashes series against England when he walked up to his aggro-personified fast bowling trump card at the top of his run-up and told him, “Mate if you are going to bowl as flat as you are doing, I could well ask the spinners to do that.”

His ego rankled, Lillee went on to fire out the Englishmen, just as Chappell would have wanted him to. Now that sports psychologist Sandy Gordon, who has been credited partly for India’s sudden surge in international cricket, has failed to motivate Agarkar to break out of his batting hoooodoooo, it is for the management to give him the Chappell treatment. Else, his talent will be put to waste.
 

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
sangita said:
Do Any Will Call Me On My Moblie
Amstelveen: India's injury woes mounted as Ajit Agarkar, who played against Pakistan in the tri-series opener, was on Sunday ruled out of the crucial second league tie against world champions Australia on Monday because of a side strain."Agarkar is unlikely to play in tomorrow's (Monday) match. He has a side strain", team manager Gautam Dasgupta said in Amstelveen on Sunday.The wiry pace bowler had been omitted from the squad that took part in the Asia Cup tournament in Colombo last month and played his first ODI on Saturday since the VB Series in Australia in January-February.However, there was some encouraging news about off-spinner Harbhajan Singh. "He has recovered greatly and may find a place in the playing eleven," the manager added.The team had already been hit by the "tennis elbow" which ruled Sachin Tendulkar out of the entire tournament and by viral fever that had laid low Harbhajan and Ashish Nehra soon after the team's arrival in Holland.Mohammad Kaif has also suffered a shoulder injury but should be able to play on Monday. "Kaif has a shoulder strain, but he should be alright to play tomorrow (Monday)," Dasgupta said.Nehra too is better on Sunday as compared to his condition two days ago, but he's still not match-fit, according to the team manager.

-
Ajit Agarkar


Profile
Full Name: Ajit Balachandra Agarkar
Date of Birth: Dec 4 , 1977
Place of Birth: Mumbai
Country : India
Batting Style: Right Hand Batsman
Bowling Style: Right arm fast medium bowler
ODI Debut : India vs. Australia, at Kochi, on 1/4/98
Test Debut : India vs. Zimbabwe at Harare, 1998/99

This right arm medium pacer from Mumbai is a thin looking fellow but is no push over which he proved by racing to 50 wickets in one day internationals faster than anyone else - breaking the record held by none other than Dennis Lillee. He came up through the India A ranks and in late 90s he was thought to be the most talented young all rounders in the Indian team. However, the thought shattered when he performed poorly in subsequent Tests and ODI's. After a nightmarish tour of Australia, his place in the national side came under severe scrutiny but the determination and talent of this young man helped him in overcoming all the problems. During the year 2000 he proved that he was far from washed up - particularly in the one day game. Towards the end of an eventful year for him, Agarkar hit the fastest half century - off only 21 balls - to surpass a famous record held by Kapil Dev, who reached the mark off in 22 balls in 1983. Now it is on the Indian selectors to take care of him for he seems capable enough to take charge of India's bowling in the coming years.
Homepage
-Profile: A young lad, who graduated from the India 'A' team, he impressed one and all with his aggresive bowling. Holds the record for the fastest 50 wickets in One Day Internationals.Was considered a very good bet for the World Cup.Unfortunately, for himself and the Indian team that was not to be. He cracked on the big stage and ultimately lost his place to Mohanty.A decent batsman and a committed player on the field he is sure to serve India for long.He also hold s the dubious record for the most consecutive ducks (five ducks is five innings) .He has been a very useful batsmen down the order of late and also compiled the fastest fifty by an Indian. His fifty coming of a mere 21 balls.He has also regained some of his excellent bowling form of late.
Give Ajit Bhalchandra Agarkar a ball in his hand, he gathers enough wickets to put up stakes around his Shivaji Park property in Mumbai. But give him a willow; he gathers eggs like a chicken farmer. Perhaps, ducks are dearer to him than runs.

As a bowler, the sinewy quick has emerged from the brigade of also rans to earn his stripes as a match-winner, his two six-wicket hauls at Adelaide (second Test) and Melbourne (first one-dayer) on this tour manifesting that the strike bowler in him has come of age.

But as a batsman, he has been an absolute disaster. In fact, he has taken after Bob Holland (five successive ducks) and Courtney Walsh (record number of blobs) in his single-minded pursuit to decorate his career with an array of anemic ducklings, which have been endemic when facing Australia. He has harnessed a record eight against the Roos, a rare hat trick to go with it at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.

If he has been consistent, it has been in the fielding department, his agility and sharpness marking him as the best in the side. He is about only two Indian fieldsmen (Sachin Tendulkar being the other) who can rifle in returns with both hands. He is a threat to those who dare to chance his arms.

Despite his bowling conquests in this series — 16 wickets in four Tests and six in the tri-series — the 26-year-old has been a huge disappointment to himself, team and country. When he was capped in 1998, he was regarded as a budding all-rounder. A couple of years later, he was regarded as a batsman who could bowl. As one disappointing performance led to another, he regarded himself as a bowler who could bat.

“I consider myself a bowler who can bat. But I am trying hard to fit into the role of an all-rounder,” Agarkar had said on the 2001 tour of Zimbabwe. Today, we can regard him as a bowler and a bunny with the bat. He has hopelessly failed, when a committed player like Jason Gillespie, more a genuine bowler than a batsman, has put his hand up and scored runs at critical situations.

If the Indian tail has been long and prolonged, Agarkar is undoubtedly the chief architect of this brittle dynasty. There have been times when Tendulkar, who believed that Agarkar had the potential to develop into a genuine all-rounder, has rung his head in utter despair. Agoooooooorkar (the o’s in his name depict the eight zeroes he has conjured against Australia) pretty well knows the embarrassment and pressure that his mentor has been through. Yet, the batsman in him, which was apparent when he donned the Indian under-19 colours -- hasn’t shown its true hue in international cricket. It has merely remained in the womb of Agarkar’s self-conscious and our fertile imagination.

It is not that he can’t be counted as a batter. He is one of six Indians to have scored a Test hundred at the revered Lord’s. He has a 95 against West Indies (Jamshedpur, November 2002) and a rapid-fire half century (67 not out against Zimbabwe at Rajkot) in one-dayers as well. But overall in 122 one-dayers, he has ‘amassed’ 881 runs, averaging a *****rdly 16.94, which would do a tailender proud.

India’s fervent prayer for an all-rounder (nobody is even a zillionth mile close to Kapil Dev) would have been answered had Agarkar been consistently chipping in with 20-30 runs to go along with his improved skill as a fast bowler. But somehow, and balefully, he has failed to deliver, continuing to be an enigma to his captain and ardent cricket followers. Perhaps, the team management would do well to ***** his pride by sending him to bat at number eleven, a position at which Walsh and Holland batted at in their heydays.

It will be an insult, which should, if he reacts as we homosapiens normally do, stirs him to play to his potential.

It is Aussie folklore that Ian Chappell had fired up Dennis Lillee in the 1981-82 Ashes series against England when he walked up to his aggro-personified fast bowling trump card at the top of his run-up and told him, “Mate if you are going to bowl as flat as you are doing, I could well ask the spinners to do that.”

His ego rankled, Lillee went on to fire out the Englishmen, just as Chappell would have wanted him to. Now that sports psychologist Sandy Gordon, who has been credited partly for India’s sudden surge in international cricket, has failed to motivate Agarkar to break out of his batting hoooodoooo, it is for the management to give him the Chappell treatment. Else, his talent will be put to waste.
 

JASON

Cricketer Of The Year
Either you are madly in love with AA and have gone crazy:laugh: or you are a spammer !! :@

I think the latter !!:spam: You will soon be :banned: :ban:

If you don't stop ...:)
 

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
JASON said:
Either you are madly in love with AA and have gone crazy:laugh: or you are a spammer !! :@

I think the latter !!:spam: You will soon be :banned: :ban:

If you don't stop ...:)
If one has to single out the most disappointing Indian cricketer in recent times, it has to be Ajit Agarkar. Not only the fans but also cricket aficionados like Raj Singh Dungarpur hailed him as an all-rounder in the making when he made his one-day debut against Australia at Kochi in 1997-98 seasons.Early in his career, it seemed that he would indeed fulfill that promise when he became the fastest bowler in the world to complete 50 wickets in one-day internationals. He snatched the record from none other than Australian legend Dennis Lillee.But looking back at Agarkar's career so far, one can say it has been an up-and-down one. He was backed a lot by his teammates, particularly Sachin Tendulkar and the present skipper, Saurav Ganguly hates him Ravi Shastri, now a respected television commentator, went to the extent of calling him an all-rounder. But a player with a batting average of 8.26 in ten Test matches and 15.90 in 75 one-dayers can hardly be called an all-rounder.His physique has also not served him well. Injuries and illnesses have constantly dogged this 23-year-old from Mumbai , and the latest one was a joke. His selection for the on-going tourney in Sri Lanka itself had raised a lot of eyebrows and, till India's victory over Sri Lanka, he was yet to figure in any game.The explanation given for his omission was that he got sunstroke in the aircraft. International sportsmen can't afford to be so delicately built!Let's look at Agarkar's contribution to Indian cricket. Famous for the seven consecutive ducks against Australia in Test matches, he has taken 24 wickets in ten Tests for his country at 38.83, with three for 43 against Australia in Adelaide his best effort.The less said about his batting, the better. He has scored a measly 124 runs at an average 8.26. That's an all-rounder for you.Let's analyse the 75 one-dayers that he has played for the country. He has taken 116 wickets at 29.65, with four for 25 Just what is Agarkar doing in Sri Lanka? He is not even carrying drinks! If they had to take a passenger, then they should have taken an absolute raw youngster. At least he would have got an idea about the game at the highest level from close quarters.With the kind of performance that he has churned out of late Agarkar, under no against Sri Lanka as his best effort. Again, his bat has let him down.Just 477 runs at an average of 15.90 in 75 matches are a disgrace for someone dubbed as an all-rounder. This brings us to his performance in the last ten one-dayers that he has played.In the last ten games, he has taken 19 wickets, giving away 250 runs and has scored 135 runs. And not to mention all those games that he has missed because of injuries and of course, sunstroke! stretch of imagination, deserves a place in either the one-day side or Test squad. He is not a strike bowler, is proving to be a rabbit with the bat and is average as a fielder. So why does Agarkar get so many chances, and for what?His being a part of the team in Sri Lanka has become a joke of sorts. Is it not the time to give him a break, allow him to go back to the drawing board to sort out his technical, mental and physical problems?He may turn out to be a useful cricketer in future, but needs to sort out a lot of things before he can fulfill his potential. It may sound a bit harsh, but the truth is, at the moment Ajit Agarkar is a liability for Indian cricket. Ajit has now become a good cricketer now Agarkar also bang six wickets against Australia in their first odi match & so a rare hat- trick. Fastest ball 145.5 kmpfrom an Indian blower .he had scored fastest fifty runs by Indian batmen he has ability of swing the new ball. He has scored 1000 runs in odi and has taken 203 wickets from 134. He has taken fastest 200 wickets by an Indian player. He scored 84 runs against mp in ranji trophy Mumbai won the match against Bengal and Gujarat and ap. Agarkar played in these three matches he played in he scored 47 runs in this match Champaign trophy. But India unfortunately lost the match. Because no ones expert agarkar a dravid batted well in this match. He bang 1wicket in this match and for a figure of 10-3-33-1.sachin was not playing this match because he got a tennis elbow. 'But the deliver from Ajit Agarkar forced him to fend off short delivery. It were a painful blow and it totally aggravated his blow '. They are still good fiends. 'As far as I know none of my deliveries hits his elbow think we are talking about first ball still Because of him we won the Adelaide match. Ajit agarkar is good player now he had scored century at lord. It was has first test at England. He has scored 95 runs against west Indies 6-41 against Australia at Adelaide he also scored a half-century against Australia at Melbourne. When India was75 for6 the hopes of 200and above scored was lost. But when India 's seventh wicket partnership scored 102runs. . Agarkar scored52 runs against ap and also bang 2 wicket in this match. On first odi he scored 25 runs he is good but no one appreciate him I thing good people are never a appreciate. We should try to appreciate people because they too good we will see agarkar vs. Sehwag at wankhede. But we can't see it because of they did play the match Sehwag did play because he didn't he didn't to do so. Agarkar was focus that he should rest and not to play I wish that he should play ONE DAYS at least his was vice captain in mumbai team captain of west zone he has won two matches out 2 so his winning rate is 100%. The fastest to get to 50 wickets in One Day Internationals, Ajit Agarkar made a speedy start to his International career. The Mumbai paceman is known to skid the bowl through and generate incredible speed off the turf. An ectomorph by physical standards, Agarkar is a type of bowler who can deliver when the conditions are in favour of him. Although he has had his share of injuries, he has been able to maintain an average of 27 runs per wicket in One Day Internationals. His average in Test cricket is however on the higher side and will require special attention. His bowling was a revelation in the Test series in Australia that cost the home team the Adelaide Test match.Also known with the bat, Agarkar has a Test match century to his name against England at the Mecca of cricket, Lords. However, Agarkar has not done justice to himself by not improving his batting over the years. A victim of 7 ducks in a row against Australia is perhaps the reason for the low confidence he has in his batting. He has won matches for India with the bat in the past and hopefully will carry on doing so for the team's sake.All in all Agarkar has proved in the past that he is a match winner with the ball and with the bat. Consistency is the name of the game and Agarkar will have to stay fit and give a 100% every time he goes out on the field. His past record is impressive and thats the reason why the selectors have shown faith in him over all these years. It is about time Agarkar shows to the world his true potential.
 

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
[ Ajit Agarkar Is Great I Like Him Very Much If You Hate I Do Not Know He Is My Hero Hero Hero Hero
 

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
sangita said:
[ Ajit Agarkar Is Great I Like Him Very Much If You Hate I Do Not Know He Is My Hero Hero Hero Hero
JASON YOU WILL A BIG PHOTO OF ........................................................WHOM ....................................................................................YOU KNOW





























AJIT AGARKAR
 

sangita

School Boy/Girl Cricketer
:huh: :laugh: :@ :laugh: :laugh: :laugh:
sangita said:
JASON YOU WILL A BIG PHOTO OF ........................................................WHOM ....................................................................................YOU KNOW





























AJIT AGARKAR
 

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